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A Data-Driven Frequency Scaling Approach for Deadline-aware Energy Efficient Scheduling on Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) (2004.08177v2)

Published 17 Apr 2020 in cs.DC

Abstract: Modern computing paradigms, such as cloud computing, are increasingly adopting GPUs to boost their computing capabilities primarily due to the heterogeneous nature of AI/ML/deep learning workloads. However, the energy consumption of GPUs is a critical problem. Dynamic Voltage Frequency Scaling (DVFS) is a widely used technique to reduce the dynamic power of GPUs. Yet, configuring the optimal clock frequency for essential performance requirements is a non-trivial task due to the complex nonlinear relationship between the application's runtime performance characteristics, energy, and execution time. It becomes more challenging when different applications behave distinctively with similar clock settings. Simple analytical solutions and standard GPU frequency scaling heuristics fail to capture these intricacies and scale the frequencies appropriately. In this regard, we propose a data-driven frequency scaling technique by predicting the power and execution time of a given application over different clock settings. We collect the data from application profiling and train the models to predict the outcome accurately. The proposed solution is generic and can be easily extended to different kinds of workloads and GPU architectures. Furthermore, using this frequency scaling by prediction models, we present a deadline-aware application scheduling algorithm to reduce energy consumption while simultaneously meeting their deadlines. We conduct real extensive experiments on NVIDIA GPUs using several benchmark applications. The experiment results have shown that our prediction models have high accuracy with the average RMSE values of 0.38 and 0.05 for energy and time prediction, respectively. Also, the scheduling algorithm consumes 15.07% less energy as compared to the baseline policies.

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Authors (4)
  1. Shashikant Ilager (22 papers)
  2. Rajeev Muralidhar (3 papers)
  3. Kotagiri Rammohanrao (1 paper)
  4. Rajkumar Buyya (192 papers)
Citations (9)

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